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Royal Philips Electronics
collaborates with Cell>Point — 9|29|03
HOUSTON, Texas - September 29, 2003 - Royal
Philips Electronics (NYSE: PHG, AEX: PHI)
announced today that it will collaborate with
Cell>Point, L.L.C, a biotechnology company based
in Englewood, Colo., to optimize Cell>Point's
novel diagnostic imaging agent on Philips'
SKYLight & gantry-free gamma camera. The
companies will share clinical trial costs to
develop the best imaging techniques for improved
clinical information and accuracy of diagnoses.
The joint goal is to develop a cost-effective,
readily accessible molecular imaging technology
that can help more clinics and hospitals
accurately diagnose cancer and pre-screen
patients for therapy.
"There is an interdependence between the
companies developing molecular imaging
technologies and those developing the agents,
and close collaboration among these groups is
essential for applied molecular imaging to
become a reality” said Peter Luyten, director of
molecular imaging, for Philips Medical Systems.
“Industry acceptance and widespread adoption of
molecular imaging technology will depend on the
availability of quality images and proven
techniques for successfully imaging and
detecting disease. The agreement between Philips
and Cell>Point represents a new kind of
collaboration that can fulfill those
requirements and open the door for future
agreements of this kind.”
Utilizing clinical trial data, Philips will
further develop and refine imaging techniques
for SKYLight, the industry's first and only
gantry-free nuclear camera, to determine
requirements for the highest possible image
quality and quantitative information about
patients' disease.
The agreement will utilize Cell>Point's
ethylenedicysteine drug conjugate technology
(“EC Technology”), a unique delivery system that
functions as a chemical bridge linking
tissue-specific ligands (such as hormones,
proteins, peptides, glucose analogues) or
pharmaceutical compounds (investigational or
FDA-approved drugs) to radioisotopes for cancer
diagnosis and treatment. “Essentially, this
technology is a universal glue that expands the
potential of molecular imaging,” said Luyten.
On the diagnostic side, the companies will
collaborate on Cell>Point's first molecular
imaging agent, 99mTc-EC-deoxyglucose . EC
Technology allows the deoxyglucose to be labeled
(i.e., linked) with the radioisotope Technetium-
99m (" 99mTc"). 99m Tc is an excellent
radioisotope for diagnostic imaging in nuclear
medicine because of its optimal energy for
imaging, long half-life, wide availability and
ease of use. Radiologists have ready access to
99m Tc either from an in-house Molybdinum
generator or by unit dose ordering from
radiopharmaceutical companies. To date, however,
promising molecular imaging agents have not been
labeled with 99mTc due to its chemical
complexity and the lack of a chemically stable
coupler capable of linking it to diagnostic
compounds. EC Technology's chemical stability
and versatility will enable the widespread use
and availability of 99m Tc labeled agents.
The collaboration will utilize 99m Tc-EC-deoxyglucose
to target tumors and SPECT cameras, including
Philips' nuclear medicine cameras to image them.
Tumors absorb more glucose than surrounding
tissue, so when a cancer patient is injected
with this chemically linked agent (via EC
Technology), active tumors will absorb both the
glucose and the radioisotope. Several of the
medical institutions where further clinical
trials will be performed will utilize Philips'
SKYLight cameras and associated analytical
software to produce images of the tumors as well
as their rate of radioisotope uptake. The
information acquired from the SPECT imaging will
be used to determine the location and size of
the tumors, as well as to predict required
therapeutic doses of agents.
“EC Technology-based molecular imaging agents
will utilize SPECT cameras to provide a
cost-effective, convenient and widespread
modality for molecular imaging, and since SPECT
cameras are already installed in thousands of
clinical departments nationwide, the adoption
curve forth is technology should be reasonably
quick” said Cell>Point CEO Greg Colip . “Philips
has outstanding SPECT technology, and we're
thrilled to strategically align ourselves with
them to help advance molecular imaging agents,
enabling more facilities to conduct cancer
screening.”
The Phase I clinical trial began in April 2003
at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer
Center, ranked the nation's best cancer hospital
in 2002 and 2003 by U.S. News & World Report .
Philips will review the trial data and determine
if adjustments are needed to improve the
clinical and diagnostic quality of the images.
If necessary, Philips will reprocess the data by
optimizing the reconstruction filtering
parameters and acquisition protocols for
molecular imaging in oncology . This technology
can provide significant improvements in the
accuracy of diagnosing the presence and the
extent of cancer . This agreement can
potentially expand into treatments using the
same EC Technology to couple a therapeutic
radionuclide to a tissue-specific ligand or
targeting cancer drug to deliver therapy
directly to the tumor site.
Philips' SKYLight gantry-free nuclear camera
removes limitations associated with the
floor-based mechanical gantries of existing
nuclear medicine cameras. SKYLight's unique
architecture allows gamma detectors to be
mounted directly into a room's structure or
ceiling and is particularly beneficial for
patients in severe pain and those who cannot
move allowing operators to image almost any size
patient, in almost any condition, in almost any
position . SKYLight operators are not required
to leave the patient's side.
The latest version of SKYLight, SKYLight 2.0,
features a unique concurrent imaging capability
that allows clinicians to acquire optimal images
for molecular agents and drugs/
radiopharmaceuticals simultaneously, providing
better quality images for interpretation and
significantly reducing imaging time. Concurrent
imaging uses a single acquisition data stream to
generate up to 16 image sets simultaneously,
each with a different energy window setting. The
sets can then be processed and converted into
clinically useful information.
Cell>Point obtained the worldwide license to EC
Technology from The University of Texas M. D.
Anderson Cancer Center .

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